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Charlize Theron Was Called Out for Speaking Afrikaans

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  • Опубліковано 8 бер 2018
  • James asks Charlize Theron about her and her mom's conversations in their native tongue, Afrikaans, and learns that it once backfired on them at an airport.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 9 тис.

  • @fallofcamelot
    @fallofcamelot 5 років тому +30472

    One of my favourite stories was how a woman wearing a hijab was on a bus in Britain and she was speaking to her child in a language that was not English. One guy stands up gets in her face and shouts “We are in England! Speak English!” To which a little old lady nearby looked at him and said “Actually love we’re in Wales and she’s speaking Welsh”

  • @therealbs2000
    @therealbs2000 5 років тому +3561

    1:03 The best part of this video for me was finding out that 3 percent of the world speaks Afrikaans and all 3 percent apparently was in the audience

    • @chesterdonnelly1212
      @chesterdonnelly1212 5 років тому +351

      There is absolutely no way 3% of the world's population speaks Afrikaans. It is less than 1%. I'm not even going to work it out. It's just obvious.

    • @buyelwasam3326
      @buyelwasam3326 5 років тому +75

      If you leave in South Africa and Namibia both black and white people speak Afrikaans ,the language is compulsary

    • @chesterdonnelly1212
      @chesterdonnelly1212 5 років тому +123

      @@buyelwasam3326 the population of South Africa plus Namibia, divided by the population of the world is less than 1%.

    • @buyelwasam3326
      @buyelwasam3326 5 років тому +15

      @@chesterdonnelly1212 yes because these two countries are the only ones that speaks Afrikaans

    • @chesterdonnelly1212
      @chesterdonnelly1212 5 років тому +161

      @@buyelwasam3326 yes I know. Charlize said that 3% of the world speaks Afrikaans, but it is actually less than 1%. However she might have been including Dutch and Flemish speakers. That might make it up to 3%.

  • @timgerber5563
    @timgerber5563 3 роки тому +909

    My girlfriend and me once sat in the train when at the next stop a group of people entered and one guy started addressing the entire train in Polish. I just looked at him blank like: dude you‘re in Germany. What are you expecting!? Turns out my girlfriend who was born in poland later told me he said: Good evening ladies and gentlemen, does any other person on this train speak our beloved language? No? Wonderful. Hence we can continue to make fun of the Berliner‘s weird taste of clothing.

    • @bellatrixryddle1731
      @bellatrixryddle1731 3 роки тому +29

      lol

    • @ZosiaSamosiaOo
      @ZosiaSamosiaOo 3 роки тому +45

      Hahaha, one single story about my language and it has to be that. :D

    • @BearingMySeoul
      @BearingMySeoul 3 роки тому +2

      #SAVAGE 🤣

    • @redsunrises8571
      @redsunrises8571 3 роки тому +37

      My grandfather was on a train in Poland and a man got on the train and started addressing everyone in German

    • @snuffles7492
      @snuffles7492 2 роки тому

      LMAO

  • @davidlarson8258
    @davidlarson8258 3 роки тому +600

    I lived in Nigeria for a while as a kid and learned some of the local language. Years later working on an engineering project I recognized the accent and an engineer’s name were from that region. After his presentation I went up and said hello in Yoruba. He just stood there not knowing what to say. I said I thought you were Yoruba so I thought I greeted you in Yoruba. I am, he responded. I’m just not expecting a white guy in California to greet me in my native language. Sorry I didn’t respond, It just freaked me out a little.

    • @happyguy2k
      @happyguy2k 2 роки тому +3

      How come you was there as a kid?

    • @michaelsmith2833
      @michaelsmith2833 2 роки тому +13

      @@happyguy2k Dad probably worked in Oil

    • @mahatmaniggandhi2898
      @mahatmaniggandhi2898 2 роки тому +13

      @@happyguy2k the atlantic slave trade

    • @imjelo
      @imjelo 2 роки тому +8

      Spent nearly my whole teenage years in Zaria, Nigeria during the 80s. When I was in college here the Philippines around 1994, I was helping my friend (who was the guidance couselor then) with the admission for elementary school. So, when I read that one of our incoming students was half Nigerian half Filipino. I went out to look for him and have a chat. I introduced myself in the best Nigerian accented English I could muster. He was smiling at me while we were chatting and told me "Eh, you de talk like us." Told him something like "Na 6 years o. I de sabi Nigerian English well-well o."
      Up to know, some 3 decades later, I could still undertand Nigerian English and some Hausa words. When I watch, Nigerian contents on UA-cam, particulary those comedy likes Mark Angel, I would understand what they are saying withput looking at the subtitle.

    • @IchigoOren
      @IchigoOren Рік тому +2

      That goes to show that Nigeria is lacking in diversity if he got that shocked.. We need to push for more diversity in Nigeria in order to fix that!

  • @bronkroon1598
    @bronkroon1598 6 років тому +5281

    For those wondering.. he said.. "I can hear everything you are saying"

  • @daftyfunky
    @daftyfunky 4 роки тому +4175

    Everyone in the comments is in full campfire storytelling mode. I love it.

  • @jambee_q
    @jambee_q 3 роки тому +420

    I remember my first time in Rome when I'd just landed and the passport control guy saw my passport is Kenyan and he switched to speaking in swahili the whole time. And it was so good. And he was like he learned it from friends and Hopes to visit Kenya one day. Loved it. Did not expect that at all considering I was away from home

    • @qassimmohamed9141
      @qassimmohamed9141 3 роки тому +2

      Hii inakaa tu uwongo aki!haha

    • @jambee_q
      @jambee_q 3 роки тому +1

      @@qassimmohamed9141 cause hakuna Italians malindi wanajua kiswahili. Wao...tembea dunia kidogo

    • @qassimmohamed9141
      @qassimmohamed9141 3 роки тому +1

      It was on s lighter note...
      And btw nilitembea 6 out of 7 continents

    • @jambee_q
      @jambee_q 3 роки тому +4

      @@qassimmohamed9141 hii inakaa uwongo tu aki haha

    • @philipbutoyi4151
      @philipbutoyi4151 3 роки тому +2

      @@jambee_q 😂😂😂😂😂 mna uchokozi kila pahali. Kenyans hatuoni Mbinguni 😂😂😂

  • @mr_knat
    @mr_knat 3 роки тому +95

    Years ago I was in Amman (Jordan) and needed to fix an issue with a plane ticket at the airline’s office on the other side of the city. I didn’t really know where I was going and my cab driver didn’t either. He spoke almost no English and I spoke almost no Arabic. Randomly, we figured out that we both knew some German. He was just learning it and I hadn’t used it since high school but we spent a very pleasant half hour chit-chatting (in probably the best German of my life), and we found the office just fine.

  • @tattts
    @tattts 4 роки тому +7792

    Once in London, my friend and I were riding the taxi and we were busy speaking Portuguese and suddenly the driver, who was this older Indian gentleman, said something like "it's been a while since I heard that beautiful language". Me and my friend were stunned, not because we were talking smack about him, we weren't but because how random that was having an Indian in London understanding Portuguese. Then he proceeded to tell us how he was born in Goa, an ex Portuguese colony in India and his parents would speak Portuguese at home, and he still was able to understand.

    • @pipalittle5216
      @pipalittle5216 4 роки тому +591

      this is like, the purest story in this comment section

    • @Rob3spierre
      @Rob3spierre 4 роки тому +382

      @@pipalittle5216 except for the colonization of India part...

    • @firstnamelastname364
      @firstnamelastname364 4 роки тому +218

      @@Rob3spierre eh, history is history. im assuming he would've experienced India after it had been granted independence so I don't think he'd have any major bad blood towards the Portuguese or the language that made up his formative years.
      same way there's Indians in Britain today who have forgiven but not forgotten stuff like the Bengali famine Churchill caused

    • @TheOriginal_Unaleska
      @TheOriginal_Unaleska 4 роки тому +79

      That's why you never judge anyone based on colour/race. Because you don't know where they are actually from.
      We have a lot of Asians in Australia. Some tourists. Some students. Some born. One of my co-workers is a student, but two Chinese ladies thought she was one of those "Australian born Asians" so proceeded to talk smack about her in their language without knowing she's actually native to their country and is just a student here and spoke in their language in turn. So that's a twist on the situation. When even her own countryman judged her because she was in a different country.

    • @Ana-bt8pr
      @Ana-bt8pr 4 роки тому +34

      john boone when you travel and meet ppl from all around the world those type of situations happen. it's great and I wish everyone could have the opportunity to live this. It opens our mind.

  • @leaflarkin5082
    @leaflarkin5082 4 роки тому +2729

    Different vibe but: I was on the NYC train heading to Grand Central. There was a homeless guy with a big cardboard sign saying he was Deaf and that he needed help to get back home. I gave him money and started up a conversation with him in sign language. He was shocked and happy that someone knew his language. He was telling me how rare it is people give him money because people assume he is faking his deafness for sympathy (which I have experienced before). As soon as we started signing together, people noticed and began giving him money.

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 3 роки тому +58

      This is what... Friqn sad-happy.

    • @zettaa6116
      @zettaa6116 3 роки тому +96

      This is the problem so many deaf/hearing impaired people face every day because it is an invisible problem!

    • @quickgirl80
      @quickgirl80 3 роки тому +1

      👍🏾💕

    • @keelyjohnston19
      @keelyjohnston19 3 роки тому +78

      @@zettaa6116 I’m hearing impaired and I lip read so it’s really hard now because most people are wearing masks 😷

    • @punchtop9449
      @punchtop9449 3 роки тому +1

      @@zettaa6116 what ?

  • @ALROD
    @ALROD 3 роки тому +104

    I’m stuck in the comment section. Someone please help!

    • @virgoqueen8950
      @virgoqueen8950 3 роки тому +3

      FACTS, WITH ALL THESE STORIES

    • @HanJacobs
      @HanJacobs 3 роки тому +1

      Me too! How deep does this go?

  • @hearthartemis8881
    @hearthartemis8881 3 роки тому +497

    I remember that one time where an exchange student was seated next to me (he was Japanese) while his friends were seated in front (I'm located at the back) and he was cussing in Japanese. I wanted to greet him and welcome him but when I looked at him, our eyes met and he said some insulting things like how fat I was and I was ugly and why was he seated near me. I was pissed af. So, after classes, when it was time to go home, I told him in complete Japanese to mind his words and that it was such a waste to have a pretty face but an ugly attitude. His face, neck, and ears grew so red I had to stop myself from laughing. I walked out of the classroom and the next day he was completely quiet. 😂😂😂

    • @hyemibo395
      @hyemibo395 3 роки тому +8

      Nice

    • @miryanaknezevic4399
      @miryanaknezevic4399 3 роки тому +7

      You go girl :)

    • @CellarDoorPoet
      @CellarDoorPoet 3 роки тому +6

      R/thathappened

    • @user-hq3lh4qo1l
      @user-hq3lh4qo1l 3 роки тому +9

      That's a cultural thing. Japan cares a lot about physical health & also they're a Collectivist society. So they rarely abandon healthy eating habits and become obese. Even their food is such that you need to try hard to get fat in Japan.

    • @scorpioninpink
      @scorpioninpink 3 роки тому +47

      @@user-hq3lh4qo1l That doesn't excuse them being rude in someone else's country.

  • @acjub
    @acjub 5 років тому +3985

    I was on a train in London once. Ended up chatting a bit with the random man who sat next to me. We both spoke in English. Went on for maybe 10 minutes. Ended up asking where he was from. Turned out we were both Norwegian. We changed language after that. It was so bizarre.

    • @PFNel
      @PFNel 4 роки тому +160

      I've met a few Norwegians and they all spoke brilliant English.

    • @LayllasLocker
      @LayllasLocker 4 роки тому +39

      Interesting. I think I haven't met a single Norwegian (or anyone from any other country) person who didn't have accent (even the slightest one). Tho, maybe it's just me, having super ear to figure out who is from where. :D it's so much fun when I guess and win. :D

    • @nuriageijsel4063
      @nuriageijsel4063 4 роки тому +5

      HAHA

    • @Cluefacer
      @Cluefacer 4 роки тому +129

      I had the same thing happen to me in London as well! A few minutes into the conversation we found out we were both Dutch and then later into the conversation we found out we actually went to the same school in the Netherlands (different years though). The world can be small sometimes :)

    • @fanget620
      @fanget620 4 роки тому +10

      Didn’t you recognize from English accent that he is Norweigan as well?

  • @ryannarine5309
    @ryannarine5309 5 років тому +3263

    He crowd gasped like they knew wtf the man said back 😂😂

    • @FutureBillionaire1111
      @FutureBillionaire1111 5 років тому +34

      so true! lmao

    • @Ryan-pg1tw
      @Ryan-pg1tw 5 років тому +12

      maybe you should express your opinion more respectful

    • @charliewright468
      @charliewright468 5 років тому +309

      It’s pretty obvious that he said “I can understand you” or something along those lines.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 5 років тому +5

      @@charliewright468 Like - Yeah, I get all what you say - about :)

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 5 років тому +19

      @TheGodEmperorofMankind Calm down now. Not everyone is going through your superiority complex.
      You think you're so smart, you'll walk your nose so high you gonna tripple in the roots, some basics. Like caring, compassion etc.
      No need to counter, I pretty much guess what's it gonna be if you don't clean up your act. And see the embarrassment of that screen name. And Adolf Hitler is not an improvement, in case you wonder.
      And no, I don't have a sense of humour - none at all (sarcasm).

  • @bertvanhoofstat7700
    @bertvanhoofstat7700 3 роки тому +216

    Me, my girlfriend and our 4 teens were in Austria skiing and needed a taxi. The taxi driver, very friendly, helped us with our skis and we drove off. So we were in his van talking to each other in Dutch (Flemish more specifically). And he was on the phone with his father, speaking Bosnian. Now my girlfriend is originally from Croatia so she could understand everything the guy was saying. And he was using a lot of bad words, even went on talking about some problems with the police. So when we got out, my girlfriend thanked him in Croatian, and you saw the guy slowly realizing what just happened and he was so embarrassed, it was really a funny situation. Gave him a big tip though, to ease the pain ;-)

  • @DracoMalfoyable
    @DracoMalfoyable 3 роки тому +46

    Completely opposite vibe but one time I was in France with my school and we were on the metro and I was talking to a friend of mine about what we were gonna do later that day, and a girl turned around with an American accent and she was like “oh my god, are you guys from the US??” and we said yeah and she was like “IM FROM OHIO” and started talking to us. She was so fucking happy to hear other Americans, it was hilarious 😂

    • @haute03
      @haute03 7 місяців тому

      The exact same thing happened to me and my friend while I was studying in France! 😂

  • @jimclark1374
    @jimclark1374 3 роки тому +2967

    Misleading title. She wasn't called out for speaking Afrikaans, but for insulting the guy in Afrikaans.

    • @ericak6849
      @ericak6849 3 роки тому +45

      This is my 4th video I've watch this morning where the title is completely misleading

    • @sandyn3384
      @sandyn3384 3 роки тому +75

      Yea he was rude, lol. Btw, these days its dangerous to speak Afrikaans in a foreign country and think no one will understand. Saffers immigrated everywhere 😂

    • @arturama8581
      @arturama8581 3 роки тому +94

      @@sandyn3384 And on top of that, there are some 25 million people speaking Dutch, who can understand most Afrikaans with little difficulty, as Afrikaans evolved from Dutch.

    • @sandyn3384
      @sandyn3384 3 роки тому +13

      @@arturama8581 yes Im fluent in Afrikaans and my dad was born in Rotterdam😊

    • @jimclark1374
      @jimclark1374 3 роки тому +2

      @William Bhoys . Dat ken ik goed!

  • @Khyarro
    @Khyarro 5 років тому +3856

    I was living in Split, Croatia. I am French-Canadian, Asian descent. I was at this coffee shop struggling to find a proper font on my laptop for a graphic design project. These two young ladies sat right next to me and started discussing and all, in French with a Quebec accent. I am from Quebec you see, but since I am Asian they just assumed that I would not understand a word and probably thought I was visiting directly from Asia, which is a logical assumption based on the crazy amount of Asian tourists in Croatia.
    They looked at me fumbling on my laptop while they were sipping on their lattés, and proceeded to talk about me and how lame I was to waste my time on trying to find the right font when that could “obviously” be done in two seconds.
    I was annoyed at their unjustified rant and since one of them was directly looking at my screen, I settled on a font and started to type the titles on my project... in French. The young lady finally shut herself up and stared at her friend silently. She whispered that I was typing in French, specific Quebec French expressions.
    Their fucking faces were priceless, CAAAAAAAAAUGHT EM.

  • @LeChardon
    @LeChardon 3 роки тому +139

    I played in a rugby sevens tournament many years ago, here in Scotland. One of the local teams we played against had two South African players, they were pretty decent players. They didn't have coded calls, they just chatted their plays in Afrikaans. My team mate was born in SA, and could understand every word they said. We hit them, man and ball, every move. Play after play.
    After the game, we shook hands with the opposition, said, 'well played, good match'. My teammate said it in Afrikaans. I swear, their faces were like cartoon donkeys, you could hear the 'hee-haw, hee-haw' moment.

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Рік тому

      i am born in South Africa, just be careful when flying to Germany Switzerland France on Air France Lufthansa or Swiss Air because im sure 95 % of the passengers are Afrikaans-speaking, i can speak German and English and Afrikaans, so many times when on a Swiss Air or Lufthansa flight i will speak German to the crew and then when landing at Zurich or Frankfurt airport many Afrikaans people flying for the first time will battle to understand the signage boards in the airport and then i will help them by speaking Afrikaans to them and one must see the look on there faces that a person who not long ago was speaking German to the flight crew is now speaking in Afrikaans, so yes as there's so many EXPAT South Afrcans living in Euope --as thousands have left the country since 1994 be careful what u say in Afrikaans,

    • @wernerschneider4460
      @wernerschneider4460 Рік тому

      That's why more and more younger white South Africans know the main "tribal" language of their province, so that in such a case they could talk in a language that nobody in Europe understands. Joke only. But for sure not many people in Europe know isiZulu, IsiXhosa, Sesotho or one of the others.

  • @LuanaSantos-rl4sb
    @LuanaSantos-rl4sb 3 роки тому +25

    I'm a Brazilian. I worked in a coffee shop and some korean business came to pay and with the change I just thank them in korean, "gomawo" cs I learned with k dramas and songs a bit, and they were shocked, just like the koreans in tv, their reaction was like "WOW" I was so fucking happy they understood me.

    • @karcavida3250
      @karcavida3250 3 роки тому +1

      고마워 is very informal tho and you shouldn't use it with strangers and seniors, 감사합니다 or 고맙습니다 are more appropriate.

    • @LuanaSantos-rl4sb
      @LuanaSantos-rl4sb 3 роки тому

      @@karcavida3250 sweetheart, I didnt learn to write in korean or anything, I learned like five words.

    • @harrymiram6621
      @harrymiram6621 3 роки тому +1

      @@LuanaSantos-rl4sb...Am thinking Karcavida was trying to tell you..."Gamasamida"(Gahm-sah-mee-dah!)...woulda been more correct.

  • @YadiraLaguerre
    @YadiraLaguerre 6 років тому +8374

    It’s New York City. There is no language you can speak privately there.

    • @Gossiptgirl
      @Gossiptgirl 6 років тому +150

      True, same with Toronto 😩

    • @YadiraLaguerre
      @YadiraLaguerre 6 років тому +21

      Qowkdjnd Xiwjsjd hahaha not even.

    • @evaanakazic1448
      @evaanakazic1448 6 років тому +69

      Slovenian. We can speak it everywhere.

    • @TheApokaliptic
      @TheApokaliptic 6 років тому +28

      Eva Ana Kazic Except in Eastern Europe... Macedonian here :)

    • @ellobo4290
      @ellobo4290 6 років тому +32

      Macedonian and Slovenian are very different. In fact even Croatians struggle understanding it as well as Slovenes can understand them. Also Slovenian isn’t in Eastern Europe.

  • @len2son
    @len2son 4 роки тому +1034

    Swore at this guy in Afrikaans in Toronto and low and behold he responded back in kind! We all started laughing.

    • @joanbenedict8863
      @joanbenedict8863 3 роки тому +5

      Lol!!! 😂😂😂😂

    • @gwarlow
      @gwarlow 3 роки тому +2

      Onepeople Carlin Yes. It's wonderful when we can understand that someone is swearing at us. What a rich experience that must have been. One more fulfilling moment to add to your collection.

    • @josephfung3058
      @josephfung3058 3 роки тому +11

      swear you can't swear in other tongues in toronto....we way too diverse, but i'm all for it hahaha

    • @QueenAlita
      @QueenAlita 3 роки тому +3

      @@hanafri8 Thank God! They are not missed.

    • @hanafri8
      @hanafri8 3 роки тому +9

      South Africa is now in a mess,because of all the higly skilled whites that left years ago,not one African regime is or eas sucessfull!

  • @TravFletch
    @TravFletch 3 роки тому +117

    I wish I knew every language there is even the dead ones. All the languages are beautiful❤️

  • @bingobongo9521
    @bingobongo9521 3 роки тому +20

    Brother and I were raised bilingual German and French. So my parents would use English if they didn’t want us to understand. Didn‘t work, we somehow learned this as well! 🤣

  • @jaded_dahlia
    @jaded_dahlia 3 роки тому +486

    For those who don't know what she said: "Yeah I can hear everything you're saying."

    • @DavidStirneman
      @DavidStirneman 3 роки тому +43

      Thank you! Came to the comments for this and had to scroll through children's story hour.

    • @daniellef7811
      @daniellef7811 3 роки тому +3

      Thank you! I was scrolling to find the translation.

    • @oiisetto4862
      @oiisetto4862 3 роки тому +5

      @@DavidStirneman 🤣

    • @paballodikobo8992
      @paballodikobo8992 3 роки тому +12

      I laughed so hard when she said it. 😂🇿🇦

    • @stephanestephane4291
      @stephanestephane4291 3 роки тому +6

      well... you know what ?.... I'm not an English native speaker and I thought she was speaking English and I couldn't catch a word 😂😂Thanks for that

  • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
    @ireallyreallyhategoogle 3 роки тому +613

    "Called Out for Speaking Afrikaans"
    Called Out for Badmouthing Someone in Afrikaans

    • @SirenScorpio
      @SirenScorpio 3 роки тому +32

      If he was rude then he deserves it🙄

    • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
      @ireallyreallyhategoogle 3 роки тому +7

      @@SirenScorpio I just corrected the title.

    • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
      @ireallyreallyhategoogle 3 роки тому +12

      @@Org80 get lost troll

    • @JayNohh
      @JayNohh 3 роки тому +5

      The guy deserved it. But her sudden response to the host after he asked her if she has done that type of thing where she was like "what do you think" rubbed me the wrong way. I have never had respect for anyone doing that. Just because I may not understand your language doesn't mean I can't tell you are bad-mouthing me. Do it in a language I can understand, or keep it to yourself.

    • @ireallyreallyhategoogle
      @ireallyreallyhategoogle 3 роки тому +3

      @@JayNohh Wow, people really do misunderstand everything.
      I just corrected the title.

  • @theminimalistmamaa9897
    @theminimalistmamaa9897 3 роки тому +13

    I was in an elevator and a husband and wife entered. They stood behind me and the wife started body-shaming me to her husband in Korean. When the elevator doors opened, I turned around and replied in Korean “this is just how my body is” and walked out. She looked mortified and her husband had this 🤦‍♂️ expression on his face.

  • @kat-lizas2480
    @kat-lizas2480 3 роки тому +42

    I worked in retail for years and I can tell you that with most languages I could tell if a person was talking trash about me based on tone, look, body language, and in some cases a basic understanding of a similar or exact language. Always remember there is more to language than just words.

    • @harrymiram6621
      @harrymiram6621 3 роки тому +1

      AGREE! Sometimes, even if you can't understand whats being said...facial expressions, body language, vocal tone and, Especially...The Eyes...Will SHOUT out to you, as song lyrics say..."More Than Words!"

  • @KBWrecker
    @KBWrecker 5 років тому +4223

    Bad titles everywhere. She got called out for talking shit, not for speaking Afrikaans

    • @dantheman9565
      @dantheman9565 5 років тому +30

      Well I mean, it's not incorrect.

    • @butbufaratethemirror
      @butbufaratethemirror 5 років тому +223

      @@dantheman9565 no it's not, it's clickbaiting. Title makes it sound like it was a racist incident.

    • @erickalfaro8389
      @erickalfaro8389 5 років тому +37

      @@butbufaratethemirror How? Afrikaans is a language... Not a race dude.

    • @GeekedOutNeckbeard
      @GeekedOutNeckbeard 5 років тому +67

      @@erickalfaro8389 considering the state of politics right now? And how she is a white woman speaking African?
      Someone dumbass somewhere would say she is appropriating black culture and blah blah you know the whole digital blackface shit? Not out of this realm that a language would be used against her.

    • @butbufaratethemirror
      @butbufaratethemirror 5 років тому +66

      @@erickalfaro8389 my comment went over your head my dudu...
      The title almost makes it sound like someone called her out because she was speaking her native tongue, which would be considered racism, imagine you are in America and you are speaking your native language but someone comes up to you and says Speak English in America... But the actual case was she was called out for talking shit about the other guy, not because of the language she was speaking in...

  • @pauloliver8130
    @pauloliver8130 5 років тому +2793

    A friend of mine who is a police officer in the UK arrested two South Africans for shop lifting. And while in the back of his police car on the way to the nick decided to discuss in Afrikaan what story they would come up with. Should have seen their faces when he told them to get out the car at the station in their language.
    He grew up in Johannesburg.

    • @maocharlisme
      @maocharlisme 4 роки тому +79

      Ouch.

    • @davidvanniekerk3813
      @davidvanniekerk3813 4 роки тому +16

      @@maocharlisme What? I was 20 yrs ago in England. The only bloke that I know who was arrested was an English speaking South African 4 stealing sweets. That will means that English South African will be deported and send to a post-Apartheid

    • @davidvanniekerk3813
      @davidvanniekerk3813 4 роки тому +17

      ..a Post-Apartheid South Africa. Not the best place to be 4 a white person. Like being German, Post WO2 or French in Post-Napoleon-Europe. At least the German will be feel save in Germany, Ostria, Switzerland, East- Belgium and North-Holland and French in France or Southern Belgium and also the Island of Corsica. AND the rest of French Colonies.

    • @blizzardstar87
      @blizzardstar87 4 роки тому +132

      @@davidvanniekerk3813 wtf are u spewing bruh.

    • @thatlionwhocosplays
      @thatlionwhocosplays 4 роки тому

      Wow 😂

  • @zuney5268
    @zuney5268 2 роки тому +12

    I love that she didn't loose her Afrikaans accent ❤️ Love from South Africa 🇿🇦

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Рік тому

      i am born in South Africa, just be careful when flying to Germany Switzerland France on Air France Lufthansa or Swiss Air because im sure 95 % of the passengers are Afrikaans-speaking, i can speak German and English and Afrikaans, so many times when on a Swiss Air or Lufthansa flight i will speak German to the crew and then when landing at Zurich or Frankfurt airport many Afrikaans people flying for the first time will battle to understand the signage boards in the airport and then i will help them by speaking Afrikaans to them and one must see the look on there faces that a person who not long ago was speaking German to the flight crew , is now speaking in Afrikaans, so yes as there's so many EXPAT South African's living in Europe --as thousands have left the country since 1994 be careful what u say in Afrikaans,

  • @zoeywyllie1411
    @zoeywyllie1411 2 роки тому +12

    I was in a pub with some friends and overheard the table next to me speaking in german. One of them came over to ask if one of the chairs was free for him to take so I responded in german. He took the chair and put it down at his table and only then did it process that I didn't respond back in english. He had to do a double take which lead to me having a few funny conversations with him and his wife and they both had really bright smiles on their faces afterwards.

  • @hanstun1
    @hanstun1 3 роки тому +2721

    Caught a Swedish couple on the subway in Toronto discussing what they were going to do to each other later in the evening.... in very explicit detail. I was getting off before them so a quick "Ha en trevlig kvall" (Have a nice evening) just before the doors closed created some seriously red faces. :)

    • @kimandersen164
      @kimandersen164 3 роки тому +28

      kväll :D

    • @hint0122
      @hint0122 3 роки тому +23

      Where they at least good looking?

    • @hanstun1
      @hanstun1 3 роки тому +125

      @@hint0122 It follows the same pattern as nude beaches. People eager to take their clothes off are never the people you wish would do this. :)

    • @hint0122
      @hint0122 3 роки тому +18

      @@hanstun1 mostly. I have seen some people who definitely should be naked at nude beaches

    • @gmshadowtraders
      @gmshadowtraders 3 роки тому +1

      That sound sexy asf :)

  • @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145
    @kaoutermouslimhaliba7145 4 роки тому +190

    It happened to my sister and her son. The live in France and but we are from Spain. They were at this bus stop and my nephew had never ever ,seen a blind man before( he was about 8 y o), like the whole scene ,with the stick ,the sunglasses ,etc and he was standing a few metres away from them , probably waiting for the bus as well. And my nephew ,thinking the man would not understand, told mi sister in Spanish, "look that man is blind , he has the glasses and all " and the man turned to his side and said in Spanish , perfectly" yes , I am blind and that is ok". My sister felt soo embarrassed, she told him he never met anyone blind and he was kind is surprised. The man was very gentle and they chatted for a while and it was all good at the end.

  • @DaniHMcV
    @DaniHMcV 3 роки тому +6

    My husband has a very close friend who is Korean-Canadian. He grew up in Canada with parents who immigrated here and only spoke Korean at home. Very smart and had worked everywhere while getting his masters and then lived in many different places after. My husband was telling me the story of Roy (his friend) doing one of his engineering work terms in Northern Africa. He was underground in a mine and needing to explain something to one of the miners but he didn’t speak his language, which was Turkish, if memory serves me right. The miner asked him if he spoke another language and unfortunately Roy didn’t. Roy asked him if the miner spoke another language and the miner didn’t. Finally, they both found that they could speak French! So here they were, in Northern Africa and a Korean engineer and a Turkish miner were speaking in french to solve a mining problem. Amazing. They both knew 3-4 languages and finally hit on the one they knew in common.

    • @biggiouschinnus7489
      @biggiouschinnus7489 7 місяців тому

      That sounds hilarious! Almost like a sitcom. Some jobs are full of things like that.

  • @MrOverHeels
    @MrOverHeels 3 роки тому +58

    My friends, who was studying sport meds in england took a metro with his gf, both are Indonesian and they were speaking indonesian. Like most minorities experienced, some white old lady told them to speak english because this is england. He calmly replied, "Actually, love, I speak 4 language not including english and my native language. You don't get to tell me what language I should speak in". He's fluent in Japanese, french, korean, and russian (not that fluent, according to him)

  • @icephoenix1932
    @icephoenix1932 4 роки тому +2522

    When the comments section is more interesting than the actual video..

  • @alese9177
    @alese9177 4 роки тому +7802

    Imagine being able to talk your native language without being told to go back to your country

    • @ingriddubbel8468
      @ingriddubbel8468 4 роки тому +602

      My mother and I speak Norwegian in public, sadly I don't think we are going to be told to go back to Norway. I think those horrible people are not focusing on European countries.

    • @cloudcampos4555
      @cloudcampos4555 4 роки тому +79

      I do it anyway ! I am certainly not going to censure myself

    • @alondraandradeandrade7293
      @alondraandradeandrade7293 4 роки тому +249

      @@ingriddubbel8468 of course not, they mostly target Spanish speaking people or some other language that doesn't sound like European or English, sadly that's the way it is.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 4 роки тому +3

      Isaac SE What is your first language?

    • @chrison1604
      @chrison1604 4 роки тому +45

      Isaac SE Im African and I’ve never been told that

  • @MonkPetite
    @MonkPetite Рік тому +5

    Be aware.. 18 million Dutch can understand the Afrikaner

  • @user-ee2cn4xp8r
    @user-ee2cn4xp8r 3 роки тому +13

    One of my only regrets in life is that I didn't speak up for myself 3 years ago when I was in line in a supermarket in Nice, France to buy something, there was a woman behind me with her daughter gossiping and talking badly about me in German, clearly not being aware that I am actually fluent in German. I just remember turning around being shocked that people talk so badly about other people they don't even know and looking at the daughter who looked like she felt uncomfortable and embarrassed by her mom. I still wished I would have spoken up, I mean that was a grown ass woman

  • @marymad7006
    @marymad7006 4 роки тому +6646

    I wouldn't use Afrikaans in front of Dutch speaking people either

    • @jiglysinger
      @jiglysinger 4 роки тому +415

      Mary Mad nope haha 😂 i am dutch and understand half what she is saying lol

    • @marymad7006
      @marymad7006 4 роки тому +205

      @@jiglysinger and that's half more than anyone else can understand, so I'd still not use Afrikaans in front of Dutchmen (just in case) 😁😁

    • @jiglysinger
      @jiglysinger 4 роки тому +58

      Alles for example is dutch and means “everything”. It’s funny:) for me it sounds like a other language with dutch influence what isn’t really surprising if you know the history (as i am dutch i am sorry for any language mistakes 🙈)

    • @geministargazer9830
      @geministargazer9830 4 роки тому +87

      Van Tastic yeah it’s weird. I speak a little German so when Dutch people speak I can pick up a word here and there maybe get the gist of it and then Afrikaans even less but it’s still “oh, I know that word!”

    • @douloureux.
      @douloureux. 4 роки тому +45

      Van Tastic nah, Germans always claim they can understand a little Dutch but Afrikaans is in a whole different league

  • @Muus76
    @Muus76 3 роки тому +696

    In the middle of Jerusalem, I'm on the phone with a friend, talking Swiss German. I was just discussing what Bagel I should get. And this older religious man comes up to me and tells me in perfect Swiss German, which Bagel he would recommend. My friend on the phone was like "what just happened...where are you????"
    There's always someone who understands you. :)

    • @vaemcdowell6205
      @vaemcdowell6205 3 роки тому +4

      Chuchichaeschtli!

    • @Caitydid561
      @Caitydid561 3 роки тому +25

      Tbh, that specific instance makes perfect sense to me, since Israel has only been recognized as a Jewish state for just short of three quarters of a century (72 years, to be precise), and a lot of the original immigrants were Holocaust survivors--many of whom would have gone through Sweden and the Netherlands to escape the Nazis.

    • @Emmsul
      @Emmsul 3 роки тому +17

      @@Caitydid561 I wonder why they insist on illegally stealing other peoples homelands when they can just go back to Europe, where they actually belong and are from.

    • @koutaza1557
      @koutaza1557 3 роки тому +6

      @@Emmsul colonizers are gonna colonize. The geopolitical location of Palastine gives advantage to western countries and to also expand in the future just like the US did to native americans where they started at the east coast and started attacking inwardly.

    • @919293949596979899
      @919293949596979899 3 роки тому +18

      @@Caitydid561 Fucking hell, Switzerland is not Sweden for fuck's sake!

  • @myversionof7771
    @myversionof7771 3 роки тому +12

    A friend and I were flying back to Iceland from a trip to Sweden. There were 2 Spanish ladies in the plane, 1 was seated right next to my friend and the other in the row behind us. There were 4 Swedish guys (group of friends) as well, 2 seated in the row behind us and the 2 others just 2 rows away. My friend has Spanish roommates so she can understand a lot (plus our own native language use a lot of borrowed Spanish words) and it turned out that the girl behind us was talking about these 4 swedish guys, how she thinks that one of them is cute and kept giggling and asking her friend to look but not be obvious about it. She fancies the bald one she said. And her friend replied with what about the one with the beard, he is cute too, and she was like no no that one is ugly. And so on. And then one of the Swedish guys behind us started to talk to the giggly lady...in Spanish! Asked her where they were from in Spain and what they plan to do in Iceland etc. I think he wanted to stop them before they say even more unpleasant things about his “ugly” friend. The girls got so embarrassed! It was an awkward plane ride for them! We just sat there wishing we had some popcorn haha

  • @stannetaprospere4301
    @stannetaprospere4301 3 роки тому +19

    I'm from Toronto, Canada. Here we just assumed everybody knows your language. Because odds are they do. ❤️🍁

  • @Adixonnz
    @Adixonnz 3 роки тому +841

    I always wanted to learn how to say “You have a good day” in lots of languages so if I ever thought someone was talking about me I could make them think I understood them. If they weren’t talking about me, then it’s just a nice thing to say.😀

    • @silverfritzreah5598
      @silverfritzreah5598 3 роки тому +58

      this is soo smart!! the comment before yours literally shared a story like that hahaha

    • @brittanyjackson6432
      @brittanyjackson6432 3 роки тому +16

      Such a smart idea!!!! I love that. I may do that too!!!😆😄

    • @blup7
      @blup7 3 роки тому +19

      Ashley, I'll start you off with Dutch: say "fijne dag!" to wish someone a nice day. ♡

    • @amandaavia
      @amandaavia 3 роки тому +24

      Yes so smart! Haha!
      In (Brazilian) Portuguese, you can say “bom dia” pronounced like “bohn gee-uh.”
      In Spanish, you can say “buen día.”
      Good luck! 😝

    • @adrianathomas2668
      @adrianathomas2668 3 роки тому +12

      In spanish you can say "que tenga un buen día"

  • @StrawberryAppleCream
    @StrawberryAppleCream 4 роки тому +2922

    I was on the train in Amsterdam and there was English (speaking) girl on the train panicking a bit about what the right stop was to get off. It was kinda cute and funny the way she fussed about it. Her boyfriend said; all these people are smiling. Her; why? Him; because I think they can understand you. She; no they cant understand me. Him; I think they can. And the whole compartment started nodding yes lol. Girl you're speaking English not Icelandic or smth

    • @smileychess
      @smileychess 4 роки тому +249

      Haha in Amsterdam I bet more people speak English than anything else; at least conversationally.

    • @daboydudus3912
      @daboydudus3912 4 роки тому +58

      @@smileychess i mean anywhere in the randstad they pretty much understand english, and they can probably speak it aswell its just that theyve got these horrible accents

    • @blackcasanova7
      @blackcasanova7 4 роки тому +90

      Everybody speaks English in Amsterdam.

    • @zoldyckhawk3790
      @zoldyckhawk3790 4 роки тому +20

      Got alot of online friends from Netherlands, they all are chill and friendly

    • @kimberlybega8271
      @kimberlybega8271 4 роки тому +45

      A few years ago my friend and I had a really long layover in Amsterdam on a flight home to the U.S., so we decided to take the train into the city and explore because neither of us had been to the Netherlands before. In preparation I downloaded Dutch onto my phone's translation app, but I quickly discovered I didn't need it to get around! My friend asked a woman at the airport if she spoke English before asking her a question, and she looked at him like he had asked a stupid question.
      Also, we had a very lovely time in Amsterdam and I would happily revisit it. :)

  • @AtTimesLikeThese
    @AtTimesLikeThese Рік тому +7

    Even though French is a common language, I surmised not many people knew the language (fluently) in a tiny convenience store in southern Virginia. I was frustrated and started talking to myself in French, crudely. A little elderly lady walked up to me and started berating me for my coarse language and suggested I improve my choice of words. In French. I immediately apologized to the lady and quickly walked out. 😳

  • @dylangore2437
    @dylangore2437 3 роки тому +14

    I was once walking past some people that were working at a stall in a shopping centre and they tried stopping me and I started speaking Arabic to pretend I didn’t speak English..... well unfortunately the girl spoke fluent Arabic and cursed me out. I had the face crack of the century

  • @Lucia-sd9um
    @Lucia-sd9um 4 роки тому +278

    My Mom grew up on a farm in a Black community, and Xhosa was her second language. We had just moved to Cape Town, she was a very fancy dresser, even just to go to the bank - we are Colored (not a derogatory term in South Africa (mixed race, (slave descendants)). Mom was light skinned - so one day on a bus trip to the shops, two Black women are discussing her, in a not so nice way - like “she thinks she’s so awesome”. “Possibly bought the earrings at the drugstore” etc. As they got up to leave the bus, she greeted them “hello my sisters, I hope you enjoy your day further”. In fluent Xhosa! Yelp!

    •  3 роки тому

      ? lot of clicks?

    • @dudeorduuude5211
      @dudeorduuude5211 3 роки тому +16

      Thank you for explaining terms to the Americans in this comment section. They aren't all worldly and get stuck in their mindsets often and probably would have jumped on you if you didn't explain.

    • @savynsavvy2180
      @savynsavvy2180 3 роки тому +4

      @@paddaboi_ no it's definitely isixhosa

    • @florencechikwanah953
      @florencechikwanah953 3 роки тому

      That is so embarrassing

    • @michaelmataranyika8434
      @michaelmataranyika8434 3 роки тому +4

      @@paddaboi_ but zulu has less clicks though, in fact it rarely has a single click and it's not heavy. Xhosa is the most famous click language

  • @aewtx
    @aewtx 5 років тому +551

    That happened to my mom's friend and her son (they were the ones being talked about). They used to live in Japan for a bit, so they learned Japanese, but they're Taiwanese. So they're back in Taiwan and in an elevator, speaking Japanese to each other. Some ladies starts talking shit about them, so the mom turns to her son and says in Chinese, "Son, does Mommy know Chinese?" And he responds in Chinese, "Yes, Mom." Those ladies were mortified.

    • @vaanikhare3825
      @vaanikhare3825 4 роки тому +37

      That’s honestly pretty badass of the mum👏🏼😂

    • @smileychess
      @smileychess 4 роки тому +17

      In my experience, Chinese speakers are the most shocked when someone speaks their language.

    • @Alternatives_Universum
      @Alternatives_Universum 4 роки тому +3

      @@smileychess They often pretend to be shocked for politeness reasons.

    • @FredMaverik
      @FredMaverik 4 роки тому +13

      @@Alternatives_Universum Yeah, polite reasons. Talking smach about other people because you thought they didn't speak their language. Sure, those ladies were being polite. Btw, Chinese people are not even usually polite.

    • @criztu
      @criztu 3 роки тому +2

      @@smileychess Chinese speakers are shocked when someone speaks their language, because Chinese language is very hard. It has like 3000 letters...

  • @princehassaniii530
    @princehassaniii530 3 роки тому +18

    I love how the audience just gasps “ooh” like they understood what she just said 😂😂😂😂

  • @lya4666
    @lya4666 3 роки тому +5

    I live in Malaysia but my great grandfather came from India during WW2 so his kids all spoke fluent Hindi. My mum's generation onwards barely spoke the language, though. So, my grandparents usually gossip about us in Hindi even if we were in the room. My grandparents lived with me growing up. Unfortunately for them, having grown up hearing them speak the language and watching Hindi movies with them gave me a pretty good grasp of the language by the time I was in my teens. So, all those times they started speaking Hindi I'd understand. I didn't call them out over it though. Recently we were talking about getting the younger generation to learn Hindi and I finally told them that I knew the basics of it and could understand most of any conversation. We had a good laugh about it.

  • @gewgulkansuhckitt9086
    @gewgulkansuhckitt9086 5 років тому +1818

    This is EXACTLY why I don't talk about other people right in front of them in Afrikaans and assume they can't understand me.
    Also it may be because I can't speak Afrikaans.

  • @dirtylemon3379
    @dirtylemon3379 3 роки тому +830

    My parents spoke Italian around the house as their secret language to gossip and so on in front of me so they never taught me. In high school I took 2 years of Italian to decode what they were saying. But what they taught in school was formal Italian while my parents' language was such a heavy dialect it was like I may have well taken Korean.

    • @stardust6691
      @stardust6691 3 роки тому +62

      Absolutely, I am Italian and I wouldn't be able to understand people speaking only in dialect from 10 km away from my town! You had it hard man.

    • @imene4038
      @imene4038 3 роки тому +74

      They should've thought you that language tho

    • @draglin93
      @draglin93 3 роки тому +41

      Lol that's sad and funny at the same time 😂

    • @iuliastratulat5503
      @iuliastratulat5503 3 роки тому +7

      my husband and I were able to to this in English until my daughter turned about 6 and she was fluent enough to understand us. (as you may have guessed, not native speakers).

    • @HerbalMoon17
      @HerbalMoon17 3 роки тому +8

      When I was younger, I sometimes wondered if there were "secret messages" (or something) on Spanish signs.
      I took Spanish and now I can read the same damn thing in two languages! 😂

  • @paulinagladysz
    @paulinagladysz 3 роки тому +9

    The same with Polish. Now I know, if I am abroad I should never talk about someone in Polish, because Polish people are everywhere.... and I mean everywhere.

  • @faz1991
    @faz1991 3 роки тому +30

    As a kid in museums i used to listen to the audio info things in diff languages (i dont know why). I used to pretend to be diff ethnicities nearby people whos i guessed. I was listening to it in Spanish and this woman started talking to me in Spanish. I’m English, not Spanish but im brown. I said “no understando” and ran off. 😂 she must have thought i was a mental case

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 роки тому +1

      I used to do that during boring speeches at the UN when i went to conferences there.

    • @slushpuppie19
      @slushpuppie19 2 роки тому +1

      Awww that's so cute haha

  • @CaptainAhab117
    @CaptainAhab117 3 роки тому +141

    Personally I feel like if you insult someone to their face in a language they can't understand that is a cowardly move.

    • @jinde75
      @jinde75 3 роки тому +5

      Also it doesn't always matter which words are used. Once a guy on a train was insulting me in papiamento when I friendly asked him not to smoke in the non smoking compatment. He was screaming at me. So I knew it was just insults. I didn't need.to know what exactly he was.saying. he was really agressive so I just made sure I wasn't followed to where my bycicle was parked.

    • @virgoqueen8950
      @virgoqueen8950 3 роки тому

      BUT HOW WOULD YOU KNOW IF YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND THEM ..........LOL & SMH

    • @jinde75
      @jinde75 3 роки тому +3

      @@virgoqueen8950 you don't need to shout. It's pretty easy from inflection and tone of voice if someone is insulting you. What exactly is being said is irrelevant. I worked with kids when my German was pretty basic. I always knew when they said a word they weren't supposed to. Body language from them and the rest of the group and tone and inflection. If you are used to being in environment where you are not a native speaker but you try to communicate be it on holiday or working in the country you get more sensitivity for these things. You could try to understand someone elses perspective. Speaking multiple languages and living in different cultures really helps.

  • @louispotter9051
    @louispotter9051 5 років тому +1753

    I speak Filipino and a lot of people really hate our language for some reason. I was at Walmart with my mom. We were in line at the counter and I was having a conversation with my mom in Filipino because she's having a hard time speaking in English. This couple in front of us turned around and asked us what language we're speaking. I said it's Filipino. Then they told us to just speak in English because they find it annoying when we speak in our own language. We're not even loud. We were talking in a moderate voice. My mom was really offended but I told her to just ignore them. So we left the store and drove home and she was silent the whole trip. I really felt bad for her. She's one of the nicest, caring, and happiest people I know but when she gets upset, it just breaks my heart. I just hope people need to understand that this country is not just one race or nationality. It's a diverse country.

    • @Carolina-wt6be
      @Carolina-wt6be 5 років тому +89

      DANG. Can't believe that happened. what a bunch of cold people

    • @rec1219
      @rec1219 5 років тому +130

      This makes me SO MAD! BIG MAD! Please tell your mother that she's wonderful and those shitty people will get their karma. Speak your language! Celebrate your culture, despite them, because they cannot ever take it away from you. It is your right, as it is the right of all. All languages and all cultures are beautiful and sacred. I'm so sorry this happened! I know my apology means next to nothing, but this just makes me SO MAD! How can people be so filled with hate? Don't let their hatred pull you down with them. Not all Americans (because I'm guessing that's where you are; where else are people that shitty?) are so evil. Give your mom a hug for me.
      😭💖🤝

    • @pigeonlove
      @pigeonlove 5 років тому +8

      Unless you were in Walmart on Mars I'm sorry I don't believe a word..foreigners are everywhere

    • @louispotter9051
      @louispotter9051 5 років тому +9

      plo Walmart US

    • @pickitypopsnickitylovejone6558
      @pickitypopsnickitylovejone6558 5 років тому +49

      Those are assholes. Obviously not very bright. Do you, I've heard your language and it sounds cool. Stay well! 😊

  • @Statalyzer
    @Statalyzer 3 роки тому +55

    Charlize Theron - technically is African-American.

    • @angolanqueen
      @angolanqueen 3 роки тому +4

      Correct

    • @aulantegoggins1721
      @aulantegoggins1721 3 роки тому +1

      I thought she was born in south Africa

    • @michelleabigael2793
      @michelleabigael2793 3 роки тому +3

      @@aulantegoggins1721 I think they mean that she’s from Africa but spends most of her time in America so African-American

    • @ZosiaSamosiaOo
      @ZosiaSamosiaOo 3 роки тому

      I think she is just South African actually :)

    • @POLSKAdoBOJU
      @POLSKAdoBOJU 3 роки тому

      Correct. She's more African-American than anyone else that identifies with that label.

  • @40s_fit_and_fab30
    @40s_fit_and_fab30 3 роки тому +19

    My story is not about speaking another language but I have to share this one , a few years ago I use to go to this nail bar where loads of ladies sat and you would wait your turn to get your nails done 💅🏽. One particular lady who worked their was very annoying , and didn’t really listen to your instructions and when she got it wrong she laughed . The following month I went back to the nail bar but avoided this particular lady . I sat with this young lady who was doing my nails , spoke perfect English ( this all took place in my home town London England ) I then went on to explain how that other lady was hopeless and I am glad you are doing my nails and they should sack her because I wasted my money on my last visit, the lady doing my nails asked which lady are you referring too I replied the 3rd one down that idiot there , the lady then burst out laughing and said that’s my Mum 🙈, you should have seen my face .

    • @MissJayana
      @MissJayana 3 роки тому

      but this is hilarious too 😁

  • @catchytuna
    @catchytuna 6 років тому +2144

    My mother tongue is Russian. So when I was in Paris, i was in the metro and there was this super stylish guy in front of me and my friend. We were talking about him in Russian like "yeah this guy is soooo stylish, real frenchie, you won't find anyone like him where we live". After 3 or 4 stations he stands up and says in Russian : "so bye-bye girls!". We were speechless😂😂😂

    • @gordongecko5950
      @gordongecko5950 6 років тому +64

      @D.SéЬasтiaпо Sçalia don't ruin!

    • @AlexeiMotoRin
      @AlexeiMotoRin 5 років тому +8

      привет! Я тебя нашел !!!

    • @soulsearchtarot
      @soulsearchtarot 5 років тому +16

      She’s so full of shit. New York is not a city it’s a world. If there’s a chance of finding anything anywhere, it’s in New York. I hate her false attitude

    • @L2Xenta
      @L2Xenta 5 років тому +32

      @@soulsearchtarot WTF .... she is talking about Paris dude.
      But then again... all this globalization bullshit , ruins everything, nothing is as it used to be back in the ol` days , in many ways. Hehe.

    • @sananguliyev4940
      @sananguliyev4940 5 років тому +4

      @@AlexeiMotoRin было бы пипец странно если ты реально тот чувак:)

  • @friederikekopke685
    @friederikekopke685 5 років тому +1013

    So I was in a bus with my mother in Japan in literally the deepest countryside and there was this lady who constantly stared at us, two obviously white people. We, thinking that she probably was xenophobic, then talked to each in German about how weird that was. Then, after over an hour in the bus (outside there was the thickest fog ever and I kept wondering whether we would ever reach our destination), the lady leaned over to me and asked me in super polite German whether she could offer me a doughnut. Turned out that she was a classically trained singer married to a famous German conductor.

    • @swirlandtwirl5417
      @swirlandtwirl5417 4 роки тому +1

      Shxt I hope I have that adventure, if that's real

    • @lachesarborisov9531
      @lachesarborisov9531 4 роки тому +2

      Jaaaa, sie brauchen eine Sprache, die weniger gesprochen ist

    • @checkmattee222
      @checkmattee222 4 роки тому +26

      That was one of the most random things that could happen to anyone lol

    • @leilanimax1517
      @leilanimax1517 4 роки тому +7

      Why was she staring

    • @FredMaverik
      @FredMaverik 4 роки тому +11

      @@leilanimax1517 she was intrigued.

  • @truthtoberevealed5314
    @truthtoberevealed5314 2 роки тому +7

    Similar thing happened to me. I got off work late one night and hungry as heck, I stopped at El Pollo Loco for a burrito and was attended by two young women at the counter as I placed my order, they kept on looking and smiling at me as they spoke Spanish amongst each other on how handsome and good looking I was. I was internationally flattered at their complements and kept a straight face as I pretended I didn't understand what they were conversing about. As they proceeded to give me my order, I looked at them and stated "Gracias por los bellos complementos", thanks for the beautiful complement, as I smiled and walked away. Both of their faces dropped to the ground in shock. Anyways I got home and noticed they had made me one of the biggest burritos I have ever had, the tortilla unwrapped because of how much meat that burrito had. 🌯

    • @anneonimous9306
      @anneonimous9306 8 місяців тому

      Sorry, but "gracias por los bellos complementos" actually means "thank you for the beautiful accessories." If you wanted to say "compliment" you should have said "cumplido" not "complemento". Also, in English, "complement" with an "e" does not mean the same thing as "compliment" with an "i".

  • @sailorpheonix
    @sailorpheonix 3 роки тому +5

    Reading this comment section is like reading stories on Quora. Love it.

  • @djjemaar1778
    @djjemaar1778 6 років тому +2953

    1:02 everyone gasping like they know what she said

    • @na6389
      @na6389 6 років тому +514

      dj jemaar I think they just “gasped” at the fact that he spoke back in Afrikaans to them

    • @djjemaar1778
      @djjemaar1778 6 років тому +58

      Azraa Ameer I know what she said. Afrikaans is my tweede taal

    • @djjemaar1778
      @djjemaar1778 6 років тому +18

      Azraa Ameer my family also speaks afrikaans. Only my siblings and I speak English as a first language.

    • @stevethecatcouch6532
      @stevethecatcouch6532 6 років тому +78

      I don't understand Afrikaans, but given the context and some Afrikaans/English cognates I concluded that he said "I understood every word." As it turns out, that's not quite what he said, but it's close.

    • @sgtmian
      @sgtmian 6 років тому +25

      it's pretty similar to dutch, which is similar to a lot of germanic languages, and given the context, it was pretty easy to guess for me, maybe it was for them too.

  • @ferrer985
    @ferrer985 4 роки тому +121

    I'm Dutch and onetime me and some friends walked in a village in Kroatia and a guy randomly started talking to us from his window. At first we couldn't understand anything, but at the same time we kinda could. We started paying attention and we ended up having a fluent Dutch-Afrikaan conversation. Afrikaan is very similar to Dutch

    • @dirkhoekstra727
      @dirkhoekstra727 3 роки тому +8

      It's Afrikaans, not Afrikaan.

    • @charlizetheron9090
      @charlizetheron9090 3 роки тому +2

      Well dear I really appreciate ❤❤❤😘

    • @dan339dan
      @dan339dan 3 роки тому +4

      Afrikaans is also sort of a mystery and interesting language to linguists. South Africa used to teach Standard Dutch in school, so nobody knows how Afrikaans was born when some linguists argue Afrikaans was sort of a creole language (usually arisen from second generation pidgin languages, i.e. languages formed because groups of people do not share a language in common).

    • @damirbajic4579
      @damirbajic4579 2 роки тому

      Yeah, we speak all sorts of languages up in here but not a lot of people speak ours. Had a great time in US during highschool cause I could say whatever I wanted😂 🇭🇷

    • @dragosdanielghetes6403
      @dragosdanielghetes6403 2 роки тому

      To me a Dutch guy told me,that Afrikaans is Dutch because and I quote “we colonised them”,not they(their ancestors) colonised their ancestors, he just lives in the past in the good old days,he said “we colonised them”,flash news you didn’t colonised no one,your ancestors did and it is over long time ago.you peasant😂your black petes are still on your golden carriage painted in a museum in Amsterdam😂

  • @hrtleygmr0456
    @hrtleygmr0456 2 роки тому +1

    1:00 Everyone gasp like they understood what she said 😂😂

  • @davethorstry6700
    @davethorstry6700 Рік тому +1

    I speak Afrikaans and have lived in London many years. I boarded a packed Londn bus one day and heard from a little way behind me a girl speaking in Afrikaans on her mobile to someone she was asking directions from. She had recently arrived in London and was due for a job interview. She was having a hard time understaning the directions given her. Anyhow she got off the bus at the next stop, one before mine in a panic. My stop was next and not far from the one she got off at. I looked back up the road and and saw her still on her mobile waving her free arm around punctuating the air. I decided she needed help so walked briskly back to her stop. She glanced at me an old man as I came up, I stopped in front of her and in fluent Afrikaans, asked her if she was lost. She almost fainted and clung to the pole and replied in Afrkaans asking how I knew she was Afrikaans, I told her I was related to a famous Afrikaans pyshic who was reknown for saving his Kommando many times from the Englsh in the Boer war with his visionay powers, and who all Afrikaans people knew well. After a while her stuttering and stammering, gasping for air and swallowing eased, I told her about the bus. She regained her composure a short minute later, I gave her the directions she needed and we both laughed our heads off! She was most grateful. And I chuckled for the rest of the day!

  • @taryndancer29
    @taryndancer29 3 роки тому +735

    One of my moms best friends is Italian and when they were younger they were at some restaurant (this was in Canada). There were two Italian men sitting near them saying gross things about my mom and her friend. My mother’s friend has very pale skin, blue eyes and blonde hair so at a first glance you wouldn’t assume she is. My mom said her friend grabbed her fork, threw it at the guys and started screaming at them in Italian. Oh how I would’ve loved to witness that.

    • @thedeepend1348
      @thedeepend1348 3 роки тому +7

      You look like mona lisa in your pic

    • @taryndancer29
      @taryndancer29 3 роки тому +5

      @@thedeepend1348 cheers

    • @QueenMegaera
      @QueenMegaera 3 роки тому +45

      Italian is a good language to scream at people in. 😊 Good for your mom and her friend.

    • @mariag5306
      @mariag5306 3 роки тому +19

      I'm half Italian but don't look it yet I speak it fluently. A lot of people have put themselves in very awkward situations around me and of course I always make sure to give a smart ass answer in Italian of course. They kinda deserved it lol.

    • @newvision1484
      @newvision1484 3 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/QpOqABXNyHg/v-deo.html

  • @marliw
    @marliw 4 роки тому +546

    I was an exchange student in Germany last year. Most of my friends at my school were other exchange students, and when we were together, we spoke only English because we were all at varying levels of German proficiency. There were actually quite a few refugees and exchange students who lived in our city, and there was some unfriendliness from locals towards us. One day during a break, we walked down the street to the bakery to get something to eat before going back to class. We walked in the doors, talking in English about what we wanted to get, and the man behind the counter says very sarcastically in German, "Oh, wonderful. I bet not one of you can speak German!" His face when we all ordered our food in German was priceless.

    • @3ball260
      @3ball260 3 роки тому +2

      No offense but, you look like Alexis Texas

    • @marliw
      @marliw 3 роки тому +64

      @@3ball260 I look like a lot of other people too - for example, Jodie Foster, the incredibly talented and intelligent actress and director who is fluent in four languages, but thank you so much for clarifying your frame of reference. Please take your pornsickness to someone else's replies. Also, starting a comment off with "no offense" makes it very clear that you realize what you're about to say is actually offensive.

    • @3ball260
      @3ball260 3 роки тому +8

      @@marliw Sorry you took offense to that. I wasn't trying to offend you.

    • @jerusalem4492
      @jerusalem4492 3 роки тому +1

      Interesting. What city did you study in, if you don’t mind me asking?

    • @shay77777
      @shay77777 3 роки тому +15

      @@marliw get him queen! 👑👏👐 I like how you intellectually tore that creep a new asshole, well done!

  • @OGSarah
    @OGSarah 3 роки тому +4

    Can Confirm. Met her mom when I worked at a Beverly Hills Car Dealership and she is NOT a woman that minces words. She's a very brusque lady. Can't ever imagine her being at a loss for words.

  • @evertonspartan1370
    @evertonspartan1370 Рік тому +1

    When she said something in Afrikaans the entire crowd went "aahhhhhh"... so this crowd speaks Afrikaans? Hmm... lol.. 😆 🤣 😂

  • @drankydrank1
    @drankydrank1 5 років тому +901

    The stories in these comments are exponentially better than the one in the video.

  • @jenniferponzini2433
    @jenniferponzini2433 4 роки тому +744

    I had this happen in reverse. Im Puerto Rican but pass as white. At my job there was a group of men at the smoking area and they were talking in Spanish about what a nice ass I have and how thick my thighs were and basically discussing my body in explicit terms. When I finished my cigarette I turned to them smiled and said, “You know sexual harassment in the work place counts even if it isn’t done in English but thank you for proving my mom right. Arroz con gandules does a body good.”
    The looks on their faces was PRICELESS!!!
    To this day they still refuse to meet my eyes or talk to me.

  • @freyjasvansdottir9904
    @freyjasvansdottir9904 Рік тому +2

    I was in New York in the subway and talking smack about someone in Icelandic and he turned around and told me to be careful in broken Icelandic. Turned out he had worked on a fishing trawler in Iceland in the 1970’s, so he totally caught me!

  • @ericlondon2663
    @ericlondon2663 Рік тому +7

    Here in the United States we have folks who get surprised Spanish is spoken in a Mexican restaurant.
    These folks also get offended by this revelation LOL 😆🤣
    You cannot write this as fiction.

  • @Pasan34
    @Pasan34 4 роки тому +955

    When I went to Japan recently, I was only speaking English. None of the Japanese that saw me went all ballistic for me not speaking Japanese in their country. These "speak English" people are just weird.

    • @YangBalanceYin
      @YangBalanceYin 4 роки тому +39

      They probably just waited and did it behind your back. These "speak English" people are loathsome, but in some twisted way I appreciate that they're doing it to my face instead of behind my back.

    • @cheshirecat5155
      @cheshirecat5155 4 роки тому +51

      Typical Japanese tatemae. They’re always polite and non-confrontational upfront. I’ve seen how some of them get behind your back though and they can be vicious. A lot of the women I met were also gossip mongers. That really surprised me. They’re the hardest people to read and their tatemae makes it nigh impossible to know if they’re being genuine. It’s something embedded into their culture so I can’t really fault them for it. One of the most important things I’ve learned in Japan is to NEVER take what they show you at face value. They can hate your guys and wish you were dead but can appear as such friendly, nice people in front of you. Their tatemae is an ironclad facade that rarely breaks. At least that’s how it was in Kanto where I stayed. They say people from Kansai are more chill though. I actually have more appreciation for Japanese people who lose their temper and become disagreeable because at least they’re being real.

    • @bestduckyrblx2944
      @bestduckyrblx2944 4 роки тому +3

      they just tend to have more respect for foreigners, but from my experience in Japan they aren't fans of foreign languages in their country that much.

    • @PSYCHOBEVO
      @PSYCHOBEVO 4 роки тому +24

      None of the "Speak English!" people would think it's wrong for themselves to speak English with other English speakers while they were in any other country, but they want to enforce that rule on other people who come to America.

    • @buninthe7424
      @buninthe7424 4 роки тому +4

      but doesn’t that suggest a disturbing amount of entitlement in how justified they feel being openly racist?

  • @share_accidental
    @share_accidental 3 роки тому +520

    i keep scrolling down. everyone's stories are just too exciting!

    • @missr5238
      @missr5238 3 роки тому

      Me too...

    • @newvision1484
      @newvision1484 3 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/QpOqABXNyHg/v-deo.html

    • @pizzariya544
      @pizzariya544 3 роки тому

      Same I stopped drawing for the comments

    • @ginox1x792
      @ginox1x792 3 роки тому

      Me 3

    • @Selvikus
      @Selvikus 3 роки тому

      Wanna like but it’s at 420 lol

  • @NuticalSky
    @NuticalSky Рік тому +2

    My favourite part of the vid was how beautifully that guy said afrikaans... It brings me peace

  • @imadeachannelnowwhat4628
    @imadeachannelnowwhat4628 2 роки тому +5

    When I went to America I was sitting in a hotel talking to my friends in Afrikaans and a little bit of Xhosa. And then all of a sudden someone in the lobby said in perfect Afrikaans “ So what do you think of America? “ I was so shocked that he could speak Afrikaans that I just nodded

    • @eisbeinGermany
      @eisbeinGermany Рік тому

      i am born in South Africa, just be careful when flying to Germany Switzerland France on Air France Lufthansa or Swiss Air because im sure 95 % of the passengers are Afrikaans-speaking, i can speak German and English and Afrikaans, so many times when on a Swiss Air or Lufthansa flight i will speak German to the crew and then when landing at Zurich or Frankfurt airport many Afrikaans people flying for the first time will battle to understand the signage boards in the airport and then i will help them by speaking Afrikaans to them and one must see the look on there faces that a person who not long ago was speaking German to the flight crew is now speaking in Afrikaans, so yes as there's so many EXPAT South Africans' living in Europe and USA --as thousands have left the country since 1994 be careful what u say in Afrikaans, and yes Hollanders must be careful what they say--if a Hollander speaks Dutch very slowly we can Understand them as Afrikaans comes from Dutch language, until around 1925 most people still spoke Dutch in SA, Afrikaans was only recognized as a official language in 1925, from 1600/1700/1800 thousands of French ,Hollanders moved to SA,

  • @guntheroberholster3311
    @guntheroberholster3311 4 роки тому +418

    I was talking in Afrikaans about an attractive guy in the Underground with a friend on the telephone and when we stopped he said in Afrikaans (Baie dankie- Thanks) and I turned bright red.

  • @tinyvibe6921
    @tinyvibe6921 6 років тому +1245

    I was in Portugal with my aunt and mother, we decided to get icecream. Now the guy behind the counter was actually really hot and my mum and aunt started talking to eachother about how hot this dude actually was, not caring about lowering their voices because dutch people are idiots and think no one will ever understand them. After we recieved our icecreams the guy just straight up thanks them for all the compliments in dutch giving a cheesy ass wink. I've never seen them more embaressed.

    • @genebijou3772
      @genebijou3772 5 років тому +7

      I thought he was feeling hot. Sorry.

    • @davinci2810
      @davinci2810 5 років тому +3

      Geweldig!

    • @gentlebabarian
      @gentlebabarian 5 років тому +1

      @ i think he has alot of dutch toutist over his floor

    • @Mu5lis
      @Mu5lis 5 років тому +91

      That happens to me all the time since I’m black and live far from where the Dutch is spoken nobody thinks I speak Dutch. Some months back I was in a bar in Nairobi and I had a Netherlands bracelet on. Two ladies who were having a coffee started to talk about me 😂 one of them said “ arme jongen! Hij draagt iets dat hij niet kent” which literally means poor boy! He wears something he doesn’t know” I said “ denken jullie dat ik iets zou dragen dat ik niet ken” 😆 do you think I would have on something I don’t know

    • @melyfae1774
      @melyfae1774 5 років тому +12

      @@Mu5lis klinkt als een paar idioten lol! Heb je goed gehandeld

  • @aethulwulfvonstopphen8013
    @aethulwulfvonstopphen8013 Рік тому +4

    Afrikaans is the most beautiful language I have ever had the pleasure of listening to..

  • @ebarteldes
    @ebarteldes Рік тому +1

    That has happened to me so many times with Spanish speakers clueless that I speak fluent Spanish, and also with Portuguese speakers.

  • @krismeful
    @krismeful 6 років тому +517

    I am half Norwegian and I speak fluent Norwegian. I went to a small college in Colorado and one day, the prof that taught in the class before mine was still in the room. She was on her phone, bad mouthing students, in Norwegian. I waited until she was off the phone before I asked her, in Norwegian, where she was from. Her face turned bright red, she answered back in Norwegian, and then booked it out of the class as fast as she could.

    • @MkHonu
      @MkHonu 5 років тому +14

      krismeful Classic 😂

    • @brucekirk5386
      @brucekirk5386 5 років тому +4

      I've only met one other person who spoke Norwegian

    • @boringpolitician
      @boringpolitician 5 років тому +42

      @@brucekirk5386 - I know this is hard to believe, but there are more than just that one of us, who speak Norwegian.

    • @coloradoreader559
      @coloradoreader559 5 років тому

      krismeful where in Colorado? I went to CU Denver!

    • @ericbrown1101
      @ericbrown1101 5 років тому

      Nice. I live in Denver and it's amazing to me how much of a melting pot it is here.

  • @haranoe
    @haranoe 4 роки тому +253

    "It was like... New York": probably just the biggest melting pot on Earth.

    • @pitmatix1457
      @pitmatix1457 4 роки тому +8

      Would of been a worse move in London. A lot of Saffers living in Wimbledon/Southfields area, Zimbabweans too.

    • @za.monolit
      @za.monolit 3 роки тому +3

      @@pitmatix1457 you mean rhodesians

    • @za.monolit
      @za.monolit 3 роки тому +2

      @Mr K lol no ny is

    • @haranoe
      @haranoe 3 роки тому +1

      @Mr K That's why I said "probably", not "surely" :-)

    • @teachinggypsy
      @teachinggypsy 3 роки тому

      @Mr K Uh oh! I knew it! Here come to English patriots!!! :D :D :D

  • @magortrans
    @magortrans 2 роки тому +1

    I am from SA and I love talking behind people's back in Afrikaans

  • @ast-og-losta
    @ast-og-losta 3 роки тому +6

    I tried to pick up a girl in a bar who was spanish by speaking some spanish sentences I learned when I was in the eighth grade. I had just enough beer in me to think I was pulling it off.

  • @daedalus_20v
    @daedalus_20v 3 роки тому +1222

    My friend is from Jupiter and we were at the train station talking about this ugly guy from Saturn and after a while he gets up and walks past us and says "Ŧгєคкเภﻮ ןยקเՇєгเคภร" and we were like _"whaaaaat???"_ lmao good times

    • @microtasker
      @microtasker 3 роки тому +70

      Yeah, Jupiter, Florida is a wacky place.

    • @mckenziekeith7434
      @mckenziekeith7434 3 роки тому +24

      This story is just as true as half the other stories in the comment section. But it is all good fun. Then again I know quite a few people who have busted someone or been busted talking shit in another language so maybe the stories really are all true.

    • @hoepless7
      @hoepless7 3 роки тому +9

      so heartwarming, loving your humor btw.

    • @punchtop9449
      @punchtop9449 3 роки тому +29

      @daedalus The problem is your head is in Uranus

    • @limabella8620
      @limabella8620 3 роки тому +8

      Funny seeing this today as the conjunction between jupiter and saturn is happening

  • @goldwinger5434
    @goldwinger5434 4 роки тому +130

    My parent used Slovak as their "secret language." Around Pittsburgh, in the 60s, it wasn't uncommon for people to understand the Slovak so my parent would generally speak in low tones. We then moved to Tucson where Slavs in general were very rare so my parents' volume level went up in public. Same sort of thing as with Ms Theron. They were talking about some guy in a restaurant and he turns around and addresses them in Slovak. Same thing, no comeback at all.

    • @MissJayana
      @MissJayana 3 роки тому +3

      Thanks - this is the first time I see and read using Slovak as a cover language (where I am from). Like less than 0.001% of the world's population speak it. The chances are super low.

    • @markusbg8
      @markusbg8 11 місяців тому +1

      @@MissJayanaits 0.065% approximately

  • @mollyrufus8362
    @mollyrufus8362 3 роки тому +4

    I forgot what they were talking about on the video...the comments section got me scrolling down for more stories😁

  • @ximena.161
    @ximena.161 Рік тому +1

    I love how people down in the comments write their own anecdotes, they are very curious and it really helps me to understand english more, that u for that

  • @thatlionwhocosplays
    @thatlionwhocosplays 4 роки тому +286

    I went to South Africa 2 years ago to see my family (I'm half South African) and we stayed at a resort near Sun city. I had to take my cousins to the park when I saw this girl who was 2 years younger than me speaking in French to her mum. She said, "They all speak English, I don't understand them!" Then she walked to a step and sat down by herself. I had only been studying french for 2 years when this happened so I just walked over to her and said " Salut, comment t'appelle tu?" (Hello, what is your name?) Her face just lit up. She replied, " What part of France are you from?"(In French)So I replied, " Je suis anglais!" (I am English) she was very surprised as I speak French with a very good accent. We had a conversation for half an hour about school and home life until she had to go. Then her mother came up to me and said, "Thank you for talking to her in French, she was worried she wasn't going to make a friend!" ( She said this in English).

    • @ojalm2036
      @ojalm2036 4 роки тому +11

      Aww what an amazing and kind gesture from you, we need more like you in this world!

    • @daledodge40
      @daledodge40 4 роки тому +6

      You made me cry a little on that one... 😉👍

    • @joanbenedict8863
      @joanbenedict8863 3 роки тому +2

    • @miryanaknezevic4399
      @miryanaknezevic4399 3 роки тому +1

      You're awesome Leo :)

  • @suannydugarte3302
    @suannydugarte3302 4 роки тому +322

    I was on a trip to Amsterdam with a friend and we stayed at this Airbnb. The place we stayed at belonged to this really nice Spanish family. While we were settling into our room and preparing to go out, we heard the couple arguing about their sex life in Spanish and it got really intimate and personal and detailed. The couple had no idea that I could understand everything they were saying as they just assumed we spoke English coming from Canada and all. For the next three days they would often talk about private matters, not knowing that I could understand it all, and by the time we left they had zero idea that I had heard it all and knew more about them than I cared to have. It was the one of most uncomfortable experiences I ever had.

    • @andrewmark2783
      @andrewmark2783 4 роки тому +22

      What were they saying? Don't hold out on us

    • @igrowtowerspermaculture9055
      @igrowtowerspermaculture9055 4 роки тому +6

      @asal j he was having fun as a "voyeur".......................

    • @joanbenedict8863
      @joanbenedict8863 3 роки тому

      @@andrewmark2783 😂😂😂

    • @pancho311
      @pancho311 3 роки тому +9

      Actually it's impolite not to tell people that you understand what they are saying, and I'm surprised that you, a Canadian, were that impolite. Honest mistake I guess. :)

    • @Extremaduur
      @Extremaduur 3 роки тому +1

      @@pancho311 I guess it is equally impolite to speak Dutch or German here in Canada. I know, I know, two wrongs don't make a right. But I am Canadian and sometimes I could really not care less about being polite.

  • @nthabisengtolo5801
    @nthabisengtolo5801 2 роки тому +2

    I love how foreigners pronounce Afrikaans 😂😂😂

  • @ShinkasaLian
    @ShinkasaLian 5 років тому +508

    Well, sister (she knows few languages and works as translator) of my sister-in-law have met two very rude Catalans (whole scene took place in Poland). They started to backbite her in English (do not ask me why not in their native lang first, that's just what I've heard). She responded to them fluently with some claims about it. They apologized and started to backbite her again, in Spanish. She asked them again in perfect language of Hugo Iglesias to stop. Again they apologized and switched into Catalan, talking how stupid she is. She also knows language of Antoni Gaudi so again guys heard about how rude and jerky they are. One of them shouted "Why u keep understanding us?!" and they ran away. So kids, don't be bitches cause sometimes your own words can hurt you more than your human target.

  • @igrowtowerspermaculture9055
    @igrowtowerspermaculture9055 4 роки тому +415

    Years ago I was walking down a very narrow street in old Athens near
    the Plaka and I was with a girl friend , she at the time was a very
    short ,plump ,very tanned canadian born greek and I at the time a
    very tall and very thin and pale scottish greek guy.
    There were two old ladies sitting opposite each other sitting on the steps
    of their respective houses..
    as we approached one said to the other...”Look, here comes the toothpick and the
    olive!”
    …..we almost laughed, but we walked on and passed them and
    then I turned back and said, in fluent greek, “ was it the one with
    the pink panties or the other one who said that?….to which my
    friend said no it was the one with the blue panties…..they were
    sitting with their legs open on the top step….
    Há há …...last
    laugh was ours!

    • @niuginiannative5517
      @niuginiannative5517 4 роки тому +2

      Lol 😂

    • @ntsakisobiancamkansi4954
      @ntsakisobiancamkansi4954 4 роки тому +3

      🤣🤣😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Iomar1975
      @Iomar1975 3 роки тому +4

      Και λίγα τους είπες! In English: You should've shamed them even more!

    • @dave2amsterdam
      @dave2amsterdam 3 роки тому +4

      @@Iomar1975 i speak a little Greek and in Amsterdam where everyone speaks English,Dutch, some French and German I use Greek when speaking to my wife when we don't want to be overheard. Είναι πολύ διασκεδαστικο!

    • @Iomar1975
      @Iomar1975 3 роки тому +4

      @@dave2amsterdam I didn't mean to exclude anyone from getting what I wrote, and I will translate it into English too now. You are right though, it is funny as long as you are not being offensive to anybody, because you must keep in mind that a lot of Greeks either permanently live there or visit the town as tourists.

  • @amyfritschka6532
    @amyfritschka6532 3 роки тому +2

    I remember riding in the casual carpool years ago into San Francisco and two older German ladies were driving. I was sitting in the back seat with another gentleman and the whole way over, they were talking about the man and saying things that weren't very nice about him in German. I happen to speak German fluently, so the entire drive, I'm hearing this. Once we get into SF, the man asks to be let out and disembarked. I then ask in German to be let out at the next intersection and they both look at me, absolutely gobsmacked! One lady turns to the other and said, "I told you about speaking German! You never know who might understand us!"

  • @w.8424
    @w.8424 3 роки тому +1

    0:16 "If I had a language with my mum..."
    Ummm, that's not how it works James 😂

  • @gijuvarghese6545
    @gijuvarghese6545 4 роки тому +221

    I am Ethiopian born, Zambian raised, South African citizen who is from Kerala, India.
    Dec'19, went to England. At Buckingham Palace..on a cold morning with 1000's of people, this school boys rugby team decides to tour the palace grounds in shorts...young men - Black & White talking very loud getting looks from the large crowds -" aren't you guys cold?", "which country are you from? Arent you guys World Champs?" etc...They were carried on in Afrikaans being boys..as I walked up to a few with a big smile and greeted them "ou gaandit?". Jaws dropped and all - didnt expect this indian family to speak Afrikaans.
    Few days later we (wife, teenage daughter & I) decide to drive to Oxford. Parked at the Park & Ride and was trying to figure out how to get a bus to the University etc..a very light skinned fir an Indian..Portuguese / arab looking man walked to the bus to take the drivers seat. There was something about his walk that made a connected. When entering while paying - asked him where are you from..he responded not paying too much attention..India, so I carried on..where abouts in India..he responded - South. Typical - Kerala - Malayalee..not getting to the point..so I asked where in south. He responded: ' its a small state called Kerala on the South West coast". I asked: "Keralatil eviddeya" - wow, the brother connection.."saar naatilna ne kandepol arrinjilla"...blah blah. to my daughter "mole..". I have only spent some 3 yrs in Kerala..and I am 52, so I guess I too have foreign habits, so it wasnt too obvious to him. We got a back seat. Each time he stopped to fetch or dropped passengers..he had a gleaming smile and turned around and explained the significance of the spot in Malayalam - other passengers looked at us strangely..I enjoyed the chat.
    2013, we went to a US tour. Chicago, Michigan Avenue. Being South African, we are so very used to Zimbabwean ( black)accents & mannerisms. Armed with our cameras, we were doing our tourist things. There was this black family doung the same..I felt at home - I didnt hear their accent but something told me I am near familiarity..elections were going in in Zimbabwe. So while they wanted a picture in front of that gothic looking building they looked to almost ask if I could take a picture..so I decided to ask " Hope you got to vote". It wsd a dad, mom and 21 yr old son. The dad looks..initially thinking what am I asking and puzzled..I carried in..you know for Mugabe or Tsvangirai...his jaws dropped..in an American accent, "how do you know",... I said, well it takes one to know one. " Are you..no you are not..as I am clearly Indian"... they were so happy..we took pictures together. He said his 21 yr old son hadnt been to Zimbabwe or Africa. They live and have been in Dallas for 25 years...
    Then there was a trip to Taipei..for a kids maths event. Many white, one black and us - as South African families..navigating through public transport..bus to train to find a restaurant in the City Centre..wanting to see this Taipei 101, the world's tallest building until the Burj in Dubai. In this crowded bus, all of us, and I simply said " eish" to the black S African woman..kind of "oh well".. very South African..to which this local Chinese guy smiles and chats in fluent Zulu...he then said he lived in South Africa for 11 years or so, and picked up the language.
    I guess, growing up in newly independent post colonial Africa, as Indian in pockets of white SA and working in multicultural South African...and being well travelled - spits out a very unique identity! Indian, African, Western mannerisms!! accent - post colonial Zambian..

    • @Lia-ny1pe
      @Lia-ny1pe 4 роки тому +7

      Nattil evde arunnu sharikkum ?

    • @gijuvarghese6545
      @gijuvarghese6545 4 роки тому +5

      @@Lia-ny1pe nattil Thiruvalla - Kozhencherry area. Karrect ayyitte, Kumbanad..arriyammo?
      Lia de o?

    • @oiisetto4862
      @oiisetto4862 3 роки тому +2

      Amazing baiyha!

    • @gijuvarghese6545
      @gijuvarghese6545 3 роки тому +1

      @@oiisetto4862 danya wad